Ryan Day On Those Who Think Ohio State Hasn't Played Enough Games For College Football Playoff: “Everybody Has Their Opinion”

By Colin Hass-Hill on December 12, 2020 at 12:29 pm
Ryan Day
37 Comments

It probably would've been easier to just name-drop Dabo Swinney. The Clemson head coach sent Ohio State fans into a frenzy this week by saying he didn't think an unbeaten team that only played six games should get into the College Football Playoff over teams like Florida and Texas A&M that have losses on their resumés but have played more games.

However, host Charissa Thompson, speaking in the final hour of Saturday's edition of Big Noon Kickoff, decided not to mention Swinney by name. Instead, interviewing head coach Ryan Day live on FOX, she asked him for his reaction to “some” people who think the Buckeyes haven't played enough games to earn a College Football Playoff berth.

“Everybody has their opinion,” Day said. “But we just focus on playing one game at a time.”

The one-game-at-a-time mentality that Day espoused has Ohio State focusing on what will transpire in Indianapolis in seven days.

The Buckeyes, who had this weekend's game against Michigan canceled earlier in the week, are gearing up for a Big Ten championship game with Northwestern. The conference removed the six-game minimum to allow Ohio State to play with a conference title on the line.

“We have a very, very talented team,” Day said. “This team's done everything we've asked them to do right from the get-go. They've been through a lot of stuff. They've been through a point where they canceled the season on them, and they fought to get it back. They've had games canceled, rivalry games canceled, but they just keep coming back and they keep getting stronger. I think you saw the team last week, what we're capable of. We're still not really clean yet, but we're very, very talented, we have a lot of opportunity moving forward to show America how good we are.

“All we really wanted was an opportunity to go play for the championship and show everybody what we're made of. I know this team's hungry.”

More from Day on Big Noon Kickoff:

  • On how Ohio State has kept its players engaged this year: “I think they've become hardened. I said it earlier in the week, I'm tired of giving the team bad news. The way that they responded this week after losing a rivalry game. You work The Game every day out of the year, and to have that taken away was not easy. But the way they responded this week, it was right on to the next game, right on to Northwestern, the championship game. What we've done is just we've tried to really shrink things down so that we're not taking all their time, we're not beating them up with Zooms, but when we're on the field we're practicing hard and they're game reps, whether it's a individual period or a seven-on-seven or a team rep. They're all game reps. That's really what we have to do in order to get better.”
  • On what challenges Northwestern presents in the Big Ten championship: “They're very well-coached. Fitz has always done a great job of that. On defense, they really know their defense. The defensive coordinator and Fitz has been there for so long, they know how you're trying to attack them and they don't give up a lot of big plays. It's very hard to run the ball on them, and they keep it all in front of them. They force you to work down the field. On offense, I think Peyton Ramsey's given them a shot in the arm. They've controlled the football, they're smart, they really don't turn the ball over. So when you do that, you've got to really be on your game. They're not going to give you anything. You have to earn anything you have. So it's going to be a challenge that way.”
  • On if Ohio State has been able to make the necessary defensive adjustments: “I think we're making some progress. I think our front seven is playing as good as anybody in the country. We've given up some big plays, but when you look at our real good plays, they've been excellent. I think our linebackers are playing as good as anybody in the country and our front seven's played strong. I think Shaun Wade made some nice plays last week, and our back end's getting stronger. I think we've made some of those corrections. If we can just get rid of some of those big plays, I think we can play with anybody in the country, and that's really been the key. But when you don't have those non-conference games and you don't have some of those things, you don't know really where you're weak until you get into a game, and that's really what's happened. So we would be typically into October right now. But we're not. We're in the middle of December. And that's been the challenge. It's been just a strange year that way. But I think we've made some improvements and I think our best football's ahead of us on that side of the ball.”
37 Comments
View 37 Comments